Prosecutors insisted the conviction of
Australian Cardinal George Pell for child sexual abuse was
"unimpeachable" as his appeal against the guilty verdict went into a
second day in Melbourne on Thursday.
But a prosecutor stumbled repeatedly as he sought to counter defence
arguments that Pell's guilty verdict in December was unreasonable.
Lawyers for Pell, 77, had on Wednesday raised 13 objections to his
conviction on five counts of sexual abuse for the assault of two
13-year-old choirboys following Sunday Mass in the 1990s.
The main point of their appeal is that the jury verdict was unreasonably
dependent on the testimony of a single victim –- the second choirboy
died in 2014 -- and that the surviving witness was not credible.
The former Vatican number three, who controlled the Holy See's vast
finances and was involved in the election of two popes, was sentenced in
March to six years in prison.
He was accused of sexually abusing the two choirboys in 1996 and 1997 in
the sacristy and hallways of St Patrick's Cathedral when he was
Archbishop of Melbourne.
In his opening remarks on Thursday, prosecutor Christopher Boyce
rejected defence arguments that the victim's testimony was a "fantasy",
saying if that were the case, "one would expect the cracks to appear".
But the prosecution said this did not happen and that the jury "were
entitled to accept the complainant as a reliable and credible witness".
"When looking at the whole of the evidence, the integrity of the jury's verdicts is unimpeachable," the prosecutors said.
But Boyce struggled at several points to respond to questions from the
three-judge panel, and he took a long pause after being made aware he
had inadvertently named the surviving complainant in open court,
contrary to legal rulings.
The hearing was live-streamed to the public, but a 15-second delay
allowed the court to prevent the victim’s name being broadcast.
Pell's chief defence lawyer, Bret Walker, on Wednesday gave a litany of reasons Pell's "offending was impossible".
"This evidence constituted a catalogue of at least 13 solid obstacles in
the path of a conviction," Pell's defence said in their submission.
Pell attended both days of hearings and on Thursday appeared engaged in
the proceedings as he took copious notes on a yellow legal pad and at
one point passed a post-it note to his legal team through a guard.
- 'Literally, logically impossible' -
The other two grounds of Pell's appeal argue legal mistakes were made in
not allowing Pell's defence to show the jury an animated video
reconstruction depicting the movement of people in the cathedral
following mass on the dates of the assaults, and that Pell was not
arraigned in the presence of the jury.
Walker argued Pell's mingling with congregants after mass on Sundays provided him with an alibi.
"If he was at the western door (of the cathedral) then the law of
physics tells us this is literally, logically impossible for the
offending to have occurred," he said.
Three judges of Victoria State's Supreme Court -- Chief Justice Anne
Ferguson, President of the Court of Appeal Chris Maxwell and Justice
Mark Weinberg -– are hearing the appeal and will make a decision on
whether to reject the appeal, acquit Pell or order a retrial.
A first trial in Pell's case last year ended in a hung jury. He was convicted in December at the end of a second trial.
Both trials were hidden from the public until a wide-ranging gag order
was lifted in February after a second tranche of charges against Pell,
involving alleged incidents in a swimming pool in his home town of
Ballarat in the 1970s were dropped.
Since his conviction, Pell has been removed as the Vatican finance chief
and lost his place in the so-called C9 Council of Cardinals that are
effectively the Pope's cabinet and inner circle of advisers.
The Vatican has opened its own probe into Pell's actions. If his
conviction is upheld, it could lead to his expulsion from the
priesthood.
https://www.geezgo.com/sps/58061
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